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Summary
The Indian passenger vehicle (PV) industry has experienced a period of strong volume growth in the last five years riding on strong economicgrowth, rising disposable incomes, favourable demographics and relatively low penetration levels. Frequent introduction of new models by
Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs), incumbents as well as new entrants, and adequate financing availability also contributed to the
growth momentum. As demand and supply tangoed, the industry’s volumes grew at 16. 3% CAGR during 2007-11, with growth being
particularly strong in the last two years (Refer Table 1).
However, since the beginning of 2011-12, the industry has been witnessing a slowdown in volume growth marred by rising inflation, hardening
interest rates and increasing fuel prices that have combined to dent consumer sentiment. Even the festive season failed to stoke domestic
demand despite new model launches, aggressive discounts and promotional schemes offered by OEMs. Apart from macro-economic
headwinds dampening demand, events such as production disruption at India’s largest PV OEM , Maruti Suzuki, the tsunami in Japan and the
recent floods in Thailand also created supply chain stresses, further aggravating the weak performance of the PV industry. The above demand-
supply pressures effectively translated into a decline in domestic volumes by 0.5% YoY in 8M FY12. Within segments, the small car and
executive car segments have been the worst impacted so far, even as volume growth in the mid-size car segment and utility vehicles (UVs)
segment remained in the positive zone. With steady increase in fuel prices since January 2009 (with 63.5% increase till date, diesel is cheaper
by ~Rs. 24 per litre, also offers better mileage), there has been a decisive shift in customer preference in favour of diesel-powered cars,
reflected in the 24% growth in sales volumes of diesel vehicles in H1 FY12 against a 11% decline in sales volumes of petrol vehicles during the
same period. In fact, in segments where both petrol and diesel options are available, diesel vehicle sales far outnumber that of petrol variants
by an overwhelming factor of 4:1. However, the preference for diesel vehicles fostered by a distorted fuel price regime could get altered in the
event of any increase in excise duty on diesel vehicles that is currently being mulled by the government.
The large incumbents in the domestic PV industry derive strength from their low cost manufacturing capabilities, established vendor base
and widespread sales and service network; however, their dominance is being challenged by foreign OEMs that have entered the domesticmarket in the recent past. Overall, ICRA believes that OEMs may continue to face challenging times at least over the short term as sluggish
demand on one hand and increasing competition on the other may restrict earnings growth. While we expect PV volumes (domestic +
export) to grow at ~11% CAGR over FY12-16, the growth in FY12 may remain tepid at around 3%.
Table 1: Volumes
Volumes YoY Growth (%)
FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12e FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12e
Domestic + Export 1,768,283 1,888,432 2,397,478 2,973,900 3,054,600 12.0% 6.8% 27.0% 24.0% 2.7%
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates
INDIAN PASSENGER VEHICLE INDUSTRY
Macro-economic factors + production-disruptions put brakes on sales
DECEMBER 2011
Corporate RatingsAnjan Deb Ghosh
+91 22 3047 [email protected]
Contacts:
Subrata Ray
+91 22 3047 0027
Shamsher Dewan
+91 124 4545 328
Jitin Makkar
+91 124 4545 368
Kinjal Shah
+91 22 3047 0054
Shishir Kumar
+91 124 4545 822
ICRA RATING FEATURE
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Domestic Passenger Vehicle Industry
Chart 1: Trend in Domestic PV Sales Volumes and Growth
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates
Table 2: Trend in Market Share in Domestic PV Industry
OEMs FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
Maruti 45.9% 47.0% 45.2% 45.9% 41.6% 37.5% 38.0%
Hyundai 14.0% 15.9% 16.4% 14.6% 15.5% 14.9% 15.6%
Tata Motors 14.8% 13.9% 13.5% 12.1% 12.6% 12.6% 13.3%
M&M 8.4% 7.8% 8.1% 7.3% 8.9% 10.1% 9.6%
Toyota 3.6% 3.1% 3.3% 3.4% 4.8% 6.4% 5.8%
GM 4.3% 4.0% 4.5% 4.3% 4.4% 4.8% 4.6%
Ford 2.2% 1.8% 1.9% 4.0% 3.5% 3.8% 3.8%
Volkswagen 0.0% 0.1% 0.3% 2.3% 3.3% 3.5% 3.5%
Honda 4.0% 3.4% 3.2% 2.4% 1.3% 2.8% 2.0%
Skoda 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% 1.3% 1.0% 1.2%
Nissan 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.5% 0.7% 0.9% 1.0%
Others 2.0% 2.1% 2.6% 2.2% 2.1% 1.8% 1.7%
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
Growth enters negative territory
After reporting strong volume growth over the last two fiscal years, the
domestic PV industry started witnessing a slowdown since the beginning ofFY12. Macro-economic headwinds and depressed consumer sentiments have
plagued the domestic PV industry resulting in volume decline of 4.3% YoY in Q2
FY12; that followed a relatively modest volume growth of 8.8% YoY in Q1 FY12.
Overall, the domestic PV volumes have declined by 0.5% YoY in 8m FY12.
The monthly volume growth of the domestic PV industry has seen a sharp
decline since July 2011; although November month was an exception with
regularising of production at Maruti Suzuki. In Sep 2011 YoY sales de-growth
was prevented by build-up of dealer inventory prompted by an early festival
season (by about ten days) coupled with new model launches and aggressive
discounts and promotional schemes offered by OEMs. Retail sales, however,
failed to pickup in Oct 2011 with market sentiments running low, resulting in
deferment of purchase by dealers. The strike at Maruti Suzuki’s plants owing to
labour issues also effected production during October.
Within the industry, the cars segment de-grew by 3.5%, during 8m FY12, while
Utility Vehicles (UVs) and Multi Purpose Vehicles (MPVs) reported a growth of
11.1% and 10.3%, respectively. Amongst segments, the small car segment, which
accounts for over 80% of the PV industry’s volumes, has been impacted the
most, while mid-size segment owing to new product launches has been
somewhat insulated from the slowdown so far. The premium & luxury segmentof cars, which had reported healthy increase in volumes during Q1 FY12, started
showing signs of weakness in Q2 FY12.
Industry leader suffered large market share loss in Q2 FY12
In Q2 FY12, industry volumes were impacted by production disruptions at
Maruti Suzuki which led to a sharp decline its domestic market share from 45.9%
in FY11 to 37.5% in Q2 FY12. Due to this, a part of the demand shifted to other
OEMs like Toyota and Honda which gained market share in the last quarter also
facilitated by their new product launches. Also, market participants having diesel
models in their portfolio - M&M, Tata Motors and Ford consolidated theirmarket position.
37% 34%29%
38%
22%30%
25%21% 23% 14%
8%4%
-9%-6%
1%
-21%
7%
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0%
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Domestic Passenger Vehicle Sales YoY Growth (%)
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Segment-wise Trends: Small Car Segment
Chart 2: Trend in Domestic Small Car Sales
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates; Note – Small cars include mini + compact segment
Table 3: Trend in Market Share in the Small Car Segment
OEMs FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTDFY12
Maruti 55.9% 54.0% 57.7% 52.5% 48.6% 47.2% 45.6%
Hyundai 23.8% 20.9% 21.7% 19.8% 21.7% 21.5% 22.0%
Tata Motors 12.1% 10.9% 8.0% 11.7% 13.8% 11.9% 14.3%
Ford 0.7% 5.1% 3.8% 5.8% 4.7% 4.7% 4.7%
GM 5.1% 4.7% 4.6% 4.5% 4.6% 5.9% 5.2%
Volkswagen 0.1% 1.9% 1.7% 2.3% 2.7% 2.7% 2.7%
Nissan 0.0% 0.8% 0.8% 1.3% 1.2% 1.3% 1.3%
Skoda 0.5% 0.7% 0.9% 1.1% 1.3% 1.1% 1.1%
Fiat 1.1% 0.8% 0.6% 0.8% 1.0% 0.8% 0.8%
Honda 0.6% 0.3% 0.2% 0.3% 0.2% 0.5% 0.5%
Toyota 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% 2.5% 1.7%
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
Demand for small cars dries out, market shrinks
The small car space, catering to the most price sensitive customer segment, was
amongst the worst performing industry segment in 8m FY12. Successive interest
rate hikes and fuel price increases, coupled with pressure on disposable income
due to inflationary conditions prevailing in the Indian economy, played on thesentiments of Indian consumers; resulting in a 7.5% YoY decline in small car
segment volumes in 8m FY12.
In the recent months, the segment has also been negatively impacted by
production disruptions at Maruti Suzuki, maker of every second small car in
India. While the segment saw several new car launches during the period
including the new Maruti Suzuki Swift (launched in mid Aug 2011), labour issues
at the company’s factories prevented the company from capitalizing on the
strong maket response it received for this model. However, with
commencement of production at Maruti Suzuki and restocking of its dealers,
sale of small cars picked-up during Nov 2011. November month also saw an
healthy YoY improvement in small car sales of Tata Motors and GM.
The small car segment, which once used to be a predominantly petrol engine
segment, is witnessing rising diesel penetration. Most of the OEMs (except
Honda) now have diesel variants in their small car portfolio that co-exist with
petrol variants.
Competitive pressures intensifying on the back of new launches
Competitive intensity in the compact car space continues to increase with
recent launches of Hyundai Eon (Oct 2011), Honda Brio (Sep 2011), Toyota Liva
Diesel (Sep 2011) and Chevrolet Beat Diesel (July 2011). Refurbished versions ofHonda Jazz and Tata Indica Vista were also introduced near the festive season.
The pipeline for new hatch back launches remains robust with following new
small car models likely to be launched soon - Maruti Suzuki Cervo, Chevrolet
Sail , Ford Fiesta hatchback , Volkswagen UP and Skoda Citigo.
While Maruti Suzuki continues to be the dominant player in the small car
segment commanding the largest product portfolio, it lost substantial market
share in Q2 FY12. Some correction in the OEM’s market share is expected over
the next couple of months as it ramps-up production and fulfills pending orders
40%
31% 27%
43%
22%28% 26%
23% 25%
9% 3%1%
-21%-18%
-4%
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Domestic Mini & Compact Car Sales YOY Growth (%)
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Segment-wise Trends: Mid-Size Car Segment
Chart 3: Trend in Domestic Mid-Size Car Sales
Source: SI AM, ICRA’s Estimates
Table 4: Trend in Market Share in Mid-Size Car Segment
OEMs FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
Maruti 35.9% 35.8% 35.4% 35.7% 36.8% 26.1% 31.1%
Hyundai 11.0% 9.6% 9.1% 6.8% 16.1% 16.8% 16.8%
Toyota 0.0% 2.2% 0.4% 7.1% 15.7% 10.3% 12.9%
Honda 16.3% 12.7% 12.9% 10.6% 7.4% 14.4% 10.2%
Volkswagen 0.1% 5.1% 8.0% 9.1% 9.3% 9.7% 10.1%
Tata Motors 20.5% 24.0% 21.5% 22.6% 4.5% 9.3% 5.0%
Ford 9.6% 4.7% 6.3% 3.1% 4.0% 6.5% 5.9%
M&M 1.9% 2.7% 3.1% 3.0% 4.6% 5.2% 5.0%
Nissan 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.7% 1.3%
Others 4.7% 3.1% 3.2% 2.0% 1.6% 1.1% 1.7%
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
Mid-Size segment outperforms industry on the back of new launches
The mid-size segment remained somehwat insulated from the overall industry
slowdown and reported 18.9% YoY growth in 8m FY12. The growth was
supported by low base of models like Volkswagen Vento (launch date-Jul 2010)
and Toyota Etios (Dec 2010) apart from healthy demand for the refurbishedHyundai Verna (May 2011) and the new Ford Fiesta (Jul 2011). The segment has
high diesel penetration and shift towards diesel driven vehicles has also
contributed to the growth in this segment. Growth in the mid-size car space is
expected to remain buoyant with upcoming launches of Skoda Rapid ,
Volkswagen UP Saloon, the new Maruti Swift Dzire and ramp up in sales volumes
of Nissan Sunny (launched in Sep 2011).
Amongst the larger selling models in this segment – Honda City and Maruti Swift
Dzire – while the former is witnessing a demand pickup after price cuts, the latter
saw a shift in its production from Maruti Suzuki’s Manesar plant (where
production was impacted to the extent of almost 50% in September) to theGurgaon plant (where production was largely normal in Q2 FY12). While, the
strike in October, which impacted production at Maruti’s both locations crippled
the production of Dzire and SX4, the situation improved in Nov 2011.
The penetration of diesel variant in the mid-size segment is expected to rise even
further. Most of the larger selling models (except Honda City ) in this space have a
diesel option - Toyota introduced the Etios diesel in Sep 2011 and Nissan
launched the diesel version of Sunny recently in Dec 2011
Market share changes hands
Tata Motors, Honda and Ford were the market share gainers in Q2 FY12 at the
expense of Maruti Suzuki. Despite intensifying competition in the mid-size car
space, it remains an attractive segment for OEMs. Rising disposable income of
aspirational middle class Indians has resulted in uptrading from a ‘small’ to a ‘big’
car. Further, profit margins in this segment are higher when compared to the
mini+compact segment. Strategy of coming out with a hatchback version of a
small car has also helped OEMs to keep their incremental investments low .
29%
45%48%
24% 17%
37%
30%
24%
26%
33% 32%
7%
11%
26%
13%
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Domestic Mid-Size Car Sales YOY Growth
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Segment-wise Trends: Executive Car Segment
Chart 4: Trend in Executive Car Sales
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates
Data post Sep-11 excludes sale numbers of BMW and Mercedes; Nov-11 data excludes sale
volumes of Audi
Table 5: Trend in Market Share in Executive Car Segment
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
OEMs FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
GM 12.5% 22.1% 27.2% 22.1% 27.3% 24.0% 26.1%
Toyota 21.0% 20.5% 23.5% 21.0% 15.1% 26.1% 20.4%
Skoda 16.9% 12.7% 10.5% 12.0% 14.6% 11.1% 12.8%
Fiat 24.0% 17.3% 10.7% 16.8% 16.6% 3.8% 9.5%
Volkswagen 5.3% 6.2% 6.2% 4.5% 2.7% 7.6% 6.5%
Mercedes 3.6% 5.3% 4.3% 6.8% 6.3% 6.3% 5.0%
Honda 12.9% 9.6% 10.2% 9.6% 5.1% 6.0% 6.0%
BMW 3.3% 4.6% 5.6% 4.4% 4.9% 4.3% 4.4%
Audi 0.6% 1.5% 1.9% 1.9% 3.9% 5.7% 4.5%
Renault 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 2.4% 4.3% 3.4%
Maruti 0.0% 0.3% 0.0% 0.9% 1.0% 0.5% 1.2%
HM 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% 0.1% 0.2%
Deceleration in Executive Car sales continues
The domestic executive car segment continued to witness flagging sales in 8m
FY12, posting a de-growth 14.2% on YoY basis. Although there was a MoM
increase in sales during the last quarter,there appeared to be a decline innumbers in Oct 2011 partly due to non-availability of monthly sales data of
BMW and Mercedes-Benz for the month, as these OEMs have stopped sharing
monthly sales numbers with SIAM.
Although the OEMs introduced several refurbished models in this segment –
Toyota Corolla facelift (June 2011), Volkswagen Jetta (Aug 2011) and Skoda
Laura vRS (Aug 2011), the overall perfromance of the segment remained
subdued. Going forward, refurbished versions of Honda Civic and Fiat Linea are
expected during mid FY13.
Toyota regains market position; Fiat sees significant market share loss
In the executive segment, Toyota gained market share in Q2 FY12 post the
launch of the new Corolla Altis and resumption of regular supplies from Japan.
During Q1FY12, the company’s production was hampered due to unavailability
of imported parts subsequent to the earth quake in Japan. General Motors,
with its Chevrolet Cruze sedan remains a close competitor to Toyota in this
segment. The segment has also seen new model launches in the recent past -
Renault Fluence and Maruti Suzuki Kizashi being the two. Fiat’s Linea (that was
launched in Jan 2009) and is amongst the lower priced offerings in this segment
and has witnessed dwindling sales over the last few months resulting in sharp
market share loss and making the OEM rethink its vehicle distribution network
strategy.
26%32%
20%0% -8% -6%
6% 6% -4% 10%-15% -6% -14%-19%
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Domestic Executive Car Sales YOY Growth (%)
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Segment-wise Trends: Luxury and Premium Car Segment
Chart 5: Trend in Luxury and Premium Car Sales
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates
Data post Sep-11 excludes sale numbers of BMW and Mercedes; Nov-11 data excludes sale
volumes of Audi
Table 6: Trend in Market Share in Luxury and Premium Car Segment
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
OEMs FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
Skoda 23.9% 22.2% 19.4% 21.2% 27.1% 15.3% 21.7%
BMW 14.3% 20.1% 25.4% 21.6% 22.9% 23.9% 23.7%
Volkswagen 5.7% 3.9% 1.3% 0.4% 15.3% 7.5% 11.9%
Audi 12.7% 17.4% 18.0% 21.4% 6.4% 14.8% 11.1%
Mercedes 14.6% 17.8% 19.3% 18.5% 17.5% 25.3% 18.0%
Honda 20.9% 13.5% 13.2% 12.9% 7.8% 9.3% 10.1%
Hyundai 3.3% 1.5% 1.2% 1.3% 1.5% 0.8% 1.0%
Toyota 3.0% 2.3% 1.2% 1.9% 1.0% 2.2% 1.6%
Nissan 1.6% 1.3% 1.1% 0.9% 0.4% 0.8% 0.9%
Growth momentum in Luxury and Premium Cars changes gears
The luxury and premium car segment which was unaffected by macroeconomic
headwinds till Q1 FY12 started showing signs of weakness since July 2011.
Weak business environment seems to have caught up with the upper-end
consumer segment as well. In Q2 FY12, the segment saw an industry wide dropin numbers barring select OEMs like Audi. Agressive discounts by dealers and
low interest rates offered by financing arms of luxury carmakers failed to revive
the slackening demand in the festive season.
High import duty on Completely-Built-Units (CBUs), and increase in cutoms duty
(from 10% to 30%) on pre-assembled engine and transmission parts has forced
many luxury car makers to set-up assembly facilities in India. OEMs are willing
to undertake these investments given the strong demand potential of
premium and luxury car market in India over the long term. Widening consumer
base has also prompted the entry of high-end brands such as Maserati, Ferrari,
Bentley, Rolls Royce, Porsche, Lamborghini in the domestic market.
European OEMs continue to dominate the segment
Following entry of new players, competition in the luxury and premium car
segment has already picked up. However, as of now, the premium and luxury
segment of the domestic car market continues to be dominated by European
OEMs – Skoda, BMW, and Mercedes.
In Q2 FY12, sales of Skoda Superb saw a sharp decline, partly due to deferment
of purchase by customers in wait of the new Superb. This, along with strong
marketing efforts by Audi and Mercedes, allowed them to gain market share inQ2 FY12
63%
38%
35%
33%
65%77%
17%
6%
23%
27% 21% 21%-27% -10%
-12%
-18%
-34%
-40.0%
-20.0%
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60.0%
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0
600
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Domestic Luxury & Premium Car Sales YOY Growth
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Segment-wise Trends: Utility Vehicle Segment
Chart 6: Trend in Utility Vehicle Sales
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates
Data post Sep-11 excludes sale numbers of BMW and Mercedes; Nov-11 data excludes sale
volumes of Audi
Table 7: Trend in Market Share in Utility Vehicle Segment
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
OEMs FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
M&M 55.2% 52.6% 54.3% 52.0% 56.9% 54.0% 55.9%
Toyota 19.7% 20.0% 19.2% 19.1% 16.8% 19.3% 17.7%
Tata Motors 13.0% 13.7% 13.3% 15.2% 11.5% 11.2% 11.8%
GM 6.0% 6.2% 6.5% 5.6% 7.3% 6.5% 6.8%
Maruti 1.4% 1.7% 1.1% 1.1% 1.9% 2.7% 1.9%BMW 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.5% 1.1% 1.4% 1.1%
Force Motors 2.2% 2.7% 2.7% 3.0% 1.0% 1.1% 1.2%
Ford India 1.0% 1.0% 0.8% 1.1% 0.8% 0.9% 0.8%
Others 1.3% 1.9% 1.9% 2.5% 2.7% 2.9% 2.8%
UV sales pick up speed in Q2 FY12
Domestic UV segment has been one of the most resilient PV segments,
registering a YoY growth of 14.5% in Q2 FY12. While growth in Q1 FY12 was
lower (5.2%) partly due to shortage of component supplies from Japan, the
situation improved during the last quarter, in which volumes were also
supported by an early festival season. While sales in October were subdued
due to inventory clearing by dealers and maintenance shutdown at M&M,
wholesale numbers shot-up in November. Lower MoM sale in Oct 2011 and
Nov 2011 was due to exclusion of sales numbers of Mercedes, BMW and
Audi from SIAM data.
The domestic UV segment is characterized by a wide price range and a more
dispersed customer base across income segments. Also the segment
primarily operates largely on diesel, which supports demand in the current
scenario. Accordingly, demand in this segment has been more stable. Entrylevel vehicles continue to do well with burgeoning demand from Tier-II and
Tier-III cities along with demand from the people-mover segment in metros.
Private ownership of models like M&M Xylo and Toyota Innova is also on the
rise. Further, unlike the premium and luxury cars, the upper-end of the UV
segment (price >Rs. 15 lakhs) continued to see strong growth (26.1% in Q2
FY12).
M&M continues to dominate the UV segment; some market share
decline expected with launches by competition
While M&M’s XUV 500 (launch Oct 2011) garnered overwhelming market
response, demand for Force One (Aug 2011) launched by Force Motorsremained staid. The UV segment has a long pipeline of new model launches
and refurbishments over the next 12 months - Tata Safari Merlin, Toyota
Avanza, Maruti Suzuki RIII, Renault Duster , M&M Korando, Audi Q3 and
BMW X3. Further, a new compact UV segment is expected to emerge with
the launch of the Ford Ecosport and M&M’s mini Xylo in early 2012. With
these launches, the UV segment is expected to get further fragmented
based on new price points.
19% 17%
13%
28%
9%
24%
19%12%
12%
6%5% 4%
16%12%
15%
0%
32%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
20,000
24,000
28,000
32,000
36,000
J u l - 1 0
A u g - 1 0
S e p - 1 0
O c t - 1 0
N o v - 1 0
D e c - 1 0
J a n - 1 1
F e b - 1 1
M a r - 1 1
A p r - 1 1
M a y - 1 1
J u n - 1 1
J u l - 1 1
A u g - 1 1
S e p - 1 1
O c t - 1 1
N o v - 1 1
Domestic UV Sales YOY Growth (%)
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Segment-wise Trends: Multi Passenger Vehicle Segment
Chart 7: Trend in Multi-Passenger Vehicle Sales
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates
Table 8: Trend in Market Share in Multi-Passenger Vehicle Segment
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
OEMs FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
Maruti 67.4% 75.2% 77.0% 73.5% 70.9% 61.1% 64.2%
Tata Motors 32.6% 24.2% 22.8% 24.7% 21.9% 26.3% 25.1%
M&M 0.0% 0.4% 0.0% 1.6% 7.0% 12.5% 10.6%
Force Motors 0.0% 0.1% 0.2% 0.2% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1%
MPV sales witness growth moderation in Q2 FY12 due to
production disruptions at Maruti Suzuki
The multi passenger vehicle (MPV) segment of the domestic PV industry
recorded moderation in growth rate to 11.2% in Q2 FY12 (29.2% in Q1 FY12)in light of supply constraints of Maruti Suzuki Eeco, the largest selling model
in the segment. Other players, constituting less than 30% of the market,
posted healthy volumes growth with M&M experiencing healthy ramp-up in
volumes of Maxximo (launched in April 2011). The growth turned negative
in October, largely contributed by production disruption at Maruti Suzuki.
Tata Motors also reported a contraction in demand in the MPV segment.
The MPV segment, pioneered by Tata Ace Magic, has met with huge success
catering to the latent demand for last mile connectivity to public
transportation hubs in cities and towns. The people mover section has also
seen a trend in increasing preference towards smaller and less expensiveMUVs like Eeco. However, private consumption of these models is limited
and most of the demand is generated from the taxi segment.
Market share of Maruti Suzuki expected to pickup; segment to see
entry of new players
Notwithstanding the decline in market share, Maruti Suzuki continues to
lead the pack with Eeco as the largest selling model. Also, the OEM is likely
to regain its lost market share once regular supplies commence fully by end
of Q3 FY12.
With sound demand potential, the MPV segment is expected to attract new
OEMs. Chevrolet is expected to launch a budget MPV CN-100 in July 2012
and Force Motors is expected to launch a new MPV in late 2012.
57%
78%
43% 56% 53% 49% 19% 18%32%
37%23%
28%
16%
7% 11%
-18%-8%
-40%
-20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
J u l - 1 0
A u g - 1 0
S e p - 1 0
O c t - 1 0
N o v - 1 0
D e c - 1 0
J a n - 1 1
F e b - 1 1
M a r - 1 1
A p r - 1 1
M a y - 1 1
J u n - 1 1
J u l - 1 1
A u g - 1 1
S e p - 1 1
O c t - 1 1
N o v - 1 1
Domestic MPV Sales YOY Growth
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Segment-wise Trends: Exports Segment
Chart 8: Trend in Export Volumes
Source: SIAM, ICRA’s Esti mates
Table 9: Trend in Market Share in the Exports Segment
FY10 FY11 Q3 FY11 Q4 FY11 Q1 FY12 Q2 FY12 YTD FY12
Hyundai 64.0% 51.2% 46.5% 43.9% 48.6% 50.9% 49.8%
Maruti 33.1% 30.4% 28.1% 24.2% 25.3% 21.6% 22.0%
Nissan 0.0% 12.5% 19.2% 26.6% 18.4% 19.8% 20.2%
Ford 0.3% 2.7% 3.5% 3.2% 4.4% 5.2% 5.1%
Tata Motors 1.5% 1.8% 1.7% 0.9% 1.8% 1.3% 1.5%
M&M 0.7% 1.0% 0.7% 0.8% 0.9% 0.8% 0.8%
Others 0.4% 0.4% 0.3% 0.2% 0.6% 0.4% 0.5%
IAM, ICRA’s Estimates , YTDFY12 corresponds to Apr 11 to Nov 11 time period
Low base and geographical diversification efforts by OEMs enable
healthy growth in the exports segment
India’s PV exports reported healthy 29.9% YoY volume growth in Q2 FY12. Apart
from the low base of Ford Figo and Nissan Micra, export volumes weresupported by greater focus of Hyundai towards the export market, given the
weak demand situation on the domestic front. However, Maruti Suzuki, the
second largest car exporter from India, saw dwindling of its export numbers in
Q2 FY12 and Oct 2011 because of production disruption at its Manesar factory
where A-Star is produced. Fluctuations in YoY export volumes have largely
mirrored the domestic/export sales mix adopted by Hyundai. The OEM had
diverted production towards the domestic market in Oct 2011 in lieu of the
festive season, but resumed focus on overseas sale in Nov 2011
While sales to Europe have remained subdued, much of the export growth has
been on account of OEMs exploring new markets. The demand outlook in Europe(India’s largest car export destination) is expected to remain weak post
discontinuation of scrappage incentive schemes, besides macro-economic
weakness plaguing many European nations. This has prompted OEMs like Maruti
Suzuki and Hyundai to diversify geographically by adding new non-European
markets. Also, Nissan, which was earlier exporting Micra mainly to Europe, is
expected to start exports to West Asian and African countries.
More OEMs expected to jump on the export bandwagon
Although competition from other exporting nations like Thailand, China, Mexico,
Argentina and Brazil is high, competition amongst exporters from India is limited,
given the few market participants. This is expected to change with multinational
OEMs exploring opportunities to develop India as their global low cost
manufacturing hub.
3%-7%
-11%
3%
-23%
0%
-15%
19%
27%
13%
3%
20%
41%
35%
14% 9%
34%
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
10%
20%30%
40%
50%
25,000
35,000
45,000
55,000
J u l - 1 0
A u g - 1 0
S e p - 1 0
O c t - 1 0
N o v - 1 0
D e c - 1 0
J a n - 1 1
F e b - 1 1
M a r - 1 1
A p r - 1 1
M a y - 1 1
J u n - 1 1
J u l - 1 1
A u g - 1 1
S e p - 1 1
O c t - 1 1
N o v - 1 1
Passenger Vehicle Exports YOY Growth (%)
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Model clutter highest in entry level and premium car segments; growing preference for diesel-powered vehicles in the domestic market
Source: ICRA Research
Base model ex-showroom Delhi prices considered
The current distribution of petrol-based PV models across various price points shows that vehicle clutter in the lower and upper price bands is the highest with the middle
price band being the leanest. The hatchback and mid-size car segments, which together account for over 90% of the PV demand in India, have attracted the maximum
attention from OEMs who offer multiple models at close price points. Most of the players in the entry level PV segment have set-up full-fledged manufacturing setup in India
and rely on domestic component sourcing to control costs. On the other hand, most of the models on offer in the upper-end of the price bracket are imported either in Semi-
Knocked-Down (SKD) form or as Completely-Built-Units (CBUs). Since overall investment required for import/partial assembly is limited, foreign OEMs have flooded the luxury
and premium car and UV segments with their global model range. This is reflected in the fact that out of a total of 162 PV models on offer in the domestic market at present,
61 vehicles have a price tag of over Rs 50.0 lakh.
Price-wise distribution of models in the diesel space is somewhat less symmetrical owing to the spread of UVs across multiple price points which remain diesel-powered
predominantly. Also, considering that diesel variants are typically priced about Rs 1 lakh higher than the petrol variants, the chart above showing diesel model distribution is
skewed towards the right as compared to that of petrol. While the number of options available to Indian customers has increased at a rapid pace ov er the last three years, the
trend has been more marked in diesel. This is in line with the increasing preference for diesel-powered vehicles in India, given the widening price differential between diesel
and petrol.
Decline because of discontinuation
of Lancer, Elantra and SRV
0
5
10
15
20
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Distribution Network – OEMs’ attention rising towards network expansion
Dealerships, being the face of OEMs, play a very crucial role in automotive value chain in terms of delivering differentiated customer experience throughout the vehicle
ownership cycle. While historically, involvement of dealerships was restricted to sale of vehicles and their servicing, operationally they have evolved as a one-stop-shop offering
services such as vehicle financing, insurance, road side assistance and pre-owned vehicle purchase. Needless to say, OEMs undergo a considerable due diligence while appointing
new dealers, looking into myriads of factors like demand potential in the town/city, number of existing dealerships, location of the dealership, financial muscle of the dealer to
invest in infrastructure and raise working capital etc. While expanding distribution network is critical for OEMs to increase sales volumes, they are also faced with the conflictingobjective of ensuring dealer viability since increasing concentration in a given territory curtails the catchment area of a dealer.
With dealership density in metros and Tier-I cities nearing saturation, much of the future growth is expected to come from Tier-II and Tier-III cities. In place of operating full-
fledged dealerships in these cities, OEMs have resorted to opening extension counters that act as satellites to main dealers in cities. The larger players in the domestic market –
Maruti Suzuki, Tata Motors and Hyundai – currently have over 50% of their outlets in semi-urban and rural locations, and thereby have a natural head start on this aspect.
Nevertheless, network expansion plans of new entrants too remain aggressive with their eye on Tier-II and Tier-III cities. Retail outlets of luxury car makers are also on the rise
with new brands like Aston Martin, Ferrari, Maserati and Bugatti making their presence felt in metros and existing players like Mercedes, BMW and Audi expanding to Tier-I cities.
Table10: OEM-wise retail Outlets
Source: ICRA Research
While demand for new dealers is high, heavy overhead costs and pricing pressures from OEMs has stalled the influx of many new entrepreneurs in the dealership business.
Supply-demand gap has resulted in churn in dealership networks, with few instances of dealer poaching by relatively new entrants. In a bid to keep the network franchisees
interested and ensure dealer viability, margins offered by foreign OEMs to their dealers is relatively higher, given the low initial volumes. Also, absence of service load and spare
sales (contributing over 40% to gross margins of a typical dealer) in the initial start-up period, has prompted new OEMs to shore up dealer profitability by other ways like
providing working capital support.
Cities covered Existing Network Expansion plans
Maruti 643 970 2000(2015)Hyundai 290 336 340 (2011 end)
Tata Motors 194 254 300 Nano specific outlets, 100
outlets for UVs
GM NA 242 300 (2012)
Honda 77 125 150(2012)
Toyota NA 152 NA
Ford 100 170 NA
Volkswagen 57 71 NA
Nissan 30 32 100 (2013)
M&M 161 180 NAMercedes 28 59 65 (2012)
BMW NA 22 40 (2012)
Audi NA 13 25 (2012)
Source: Company Releases, Media Articles, ICRA Research
New Car
37%
Used Car
12%Accessories
7%
Service
30%
Spares
14%
Segment-wise profit contribution of a dealer
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Trimming down new product development costs becomes an imperative
The design, engineering and development cost of building a new PV model in developed markets, having no carry-over components and built from scratch, starts at around
USD 1 billion. This is not surprising since an automobile is a complex machinery bringing together thousands of both functional as well as safety-critical parts that must
function reliably as a system over an extended period of over 10 years while meeting the extant safety and emission norms. These investments are generally spread over a
time horizon of 2-4 years (depending on the manufacturer and model ), representing the duration between conceptualization and mass production. The development cycle of a
new PV model involves multiple phases including market survey, feasibility study, design, engineering, development and validation of individual parts, assemblies and fully-built vehicles. The process involves three broad cost elements viz., cost of manpower, cost of tooling and cost of plant & machinery ( listed in increasing order of cost burden).
While the scope of reducing expenses varies across cost heads, PV OEMs are increasingly showing the proclivity to focus on all three to maximize benefits. The various levers
accessible to OEMs to improve product development efficiency are given in Table 2.
Table 11: Avenues for PV OEMs to reduce new model development costs
Cost reduction measures taken by PV OEMs during new product development Examples in Indian context
Deploying common platforms to produce more than one vehicle out of largely the same development
investment
Maruti Suzuki - (a) Swift and Swift Dzire; (b) Alto, WagonR
Tata Motors - Indica, Indigo
Nissan - Micra, Sunny
Toyota Kirloskar - Liva, Etios
Use a common engine and other parts across a broad range of models
Same diesel engine deployed in:
Maruti Suzuki Swift , Tata Indica Vista, Fiat Grande Punto
Maruti Suzuki SX4, Tata Indigo Manza, Fiat Linea
Build and launch global platforms across a much wider spectrum of the world market
Global launch of the Suzuki Swift in Japan, Europe and India
Toyota Etios and Liva, launched first in the Indian market, now planned to be
exported to South Africa
Nissan Micra available in multiple geographies including India, China, Japan,
Australia, Canada, USA, Latin America
Design outsourcing to low cost destinationsFollowing companies have design and research centres in India: General Motors,
Hyundai, Ford, Honda, Suzuki
Increasing use of digital prototypes to cut down product development cycle time Used by most PV OEMs in India with a varying degreeSource: ICRA Research
While reducing product development costs is a focus area across global OEMs, it is ought to be more so in the Indian context given the sharp rise in competitive intensity in
the PV industry over the last two years. The growing competitive intensity has persuaded OEMs to increase the rate at which they introduce new models in the domestic
market and upgrade existing ones (while leveraging the same platforms). This has necessitated OEMs and component manufacturers to incur reasonably large capital
investments on a recurring basis towards new product development. The strong volume growth recorded by the PV industry in the past had allowed the market to assimilate
the flurry of new model launches, while giving reasonable returns to OEMs (barring few exceptions). However, since the frequency of new model launches in the PV market
has been particularly high over the last two years, it remains to be seen to what extent OEMs can protect their profitability in the current environment of sluggish demand. In
ICRA’s view, the likelihood of OEMs’ profitability erosion seems high over the short term given the large supply push having happened at a time when demand environment in
the PV market is not conducive. That said, the present demand-supply mismatch may be considered to be incidental since the new models launched in the recent past were
conceptualized several years in advance assuming the trend in strong growth of the PV industry to be sustained at the time of launch. Thus, although new product
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development plans of OEMs are influenced more by medium to long term growth prospects of a market or segment, their ability to improve efficiency of development
expenditure remains a critical control variable which could allow them to mitigate the adverse impact of cyclical dips on profitability. Creditably, Indian OEMs like Tata Motors
and M&M have demonstrated their ability to engineer new products at significantly lower costs as compared to their global cou nterparts. In ICRA’s view, a cut-to-bone
product development approach encompassing themes of platform sharing (engine level and vehicle level), design outsourcing to low cost destinations, increasing the use of
digital prototyping and adopting reverse engineering techniques to cut down the time spent on iterations during design, development and testing is expected to occupy centre
stage in the times to come.
Automotive Manufacturing Clusters in India – New ones in the making
The benefits available to the automotive industry arising from agglomeration of manufacturing facilities in concentrated spatial hubs are undeniable. These benefits, the
outcome of commonalities and complementarities in the clusters of interconnected companies, include improvement in supply chain management, greater investment
economies and lower logistics costs all combining to generate improved productivity and competitiveness for companies constituting the cluster. India’s automotive industry
is concentrated across three major regions – the National Capital Region (NCR) and Uttaranchal, with OEMs such as Maruti Suzuki, Honda Siel, Hero MotoCorp and Bajaj Auto;
the Chennai-Hosur-Bangalore region, with OEMs such as Hyundai, Toyota, Ford, Ashok Leyland and TVS; and the Pune-Nashik-Aurangabad region, with OEMs such as Tata
Motors, Bajaj Auto, Mahindra & Mahindra and Volkswagen. Each of the above hubs contributes over 30% to the total automotive revenues, indicating existence of a well-
balanced eco-system of automobile companies dotting these regions. In addition, there are two other relatively smaller hubs located in and around Pithampur in Central India
and Jamshedpur-Kolkata in Eastern India, whose contribution to automotive industry revenues remains moderate.
Table 12: Automotive hubs in India and key OEMs present
North South West East Central
Key Regions:- NCR and Uttaranchal Chennai-Hosur-Bangalore Pune-Nashik-Aurangabad Jamshedpur-Kolkata Pithampur
PVMaruti Suzuki, Tata Motors,
Honda, Sonalika
Hyundai, Ford, Toyota,
Hindustan Motors, Mahindra
Reva, Renault-Nissan, BMW
General Motors, M&M, Fiat,
Tata Motors, Skoda, Audi,
Volkswagen, Mercedes Benz
Hindustan Motors
2W
Honda, Suzuki, LML, Yamaha,
Hero MotoCorp, Bajaj Auto,
TVS
Royal Enfield, TVS Bajaj, Mahindra Two Wheelers Mahindra Two Wheelers
CVSML Isuzu, Tata Motors, Ashok
Leyland
Volvo, Ashok Leyland, Tata
Motors, Scania, Daimler
Trucks, ALL-Nissan
Force, AMW, Mahindra
Navistar
Hindustan Motors,
Tata Motors
Volvo-Eicher, Hindustan
Motors, Force, MAN Force
3W M&M TVS Piaggio, Bajaj Auto, Atul Auto
Tractors ITL, New Holland, TAFE, Escorts Same-Deutz Fahr, TAFE John Deere, M&M TAFE
Source: ICRA’s Research ; Company names indicated in Blue font represent greenfield investments made over last five years
Typically, to set-up an integrated car manufacturing facility encompassing press shop, weld shop, paint shop, machine shop and assembly shop with 200,000 vehicle
manufacturing capacity, an investment outlay of around Rs. 4,000 Crore is required. Due to such large investment involved, choosing an appropriate manufacturing location is
a vital decision element for any OEM as it could influence the payback period1. Factors which generally go into such decision making for OEMs include ease and price of land
1 The payback period for a PV OEM making such investments could be in the range of 7-10 years depending on the capacity utilization, profitability and fiscal incentives offered
by the state.
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available, strength of infrastructure facilities (including road, rail, port connectivity; power availability), availability of manpower, existence of an established vendor base,
besides extent of fiscal incentives offered by the state in terms of excise and income tax holiday. Over the last five years, the bulk of the greenfield investments by PV OEMs in
India have occurred in the Southern and Western regions with the five PV OEMs viz., Renault Nissan, BMW, Audi, Volkswagen and Mercedes Benz incurring an aggregate
capex of around Rs. 9,000 Crore within existing clusters in Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra (Refer Table 1).
While cluster-based growth has its merits, the existing clusters are bound to hit a ceiling over time in terms of their ability to make available to the industry factors of
production (including land and labour) in adequate measure. Already, there are signs of new automotive clusters emerging in India. Since the year 2007, Uttaranchal hasemerged as an alternate manufacturing hub in North India becoming home to various 2W and CV manufacturers. Gujarat too, which already had names such as General
Motors (at Halol) and Asia Motor Works (at Bhuj), has added Tata Motors (at Sanand) over the last one year, besides evincing interest from other players such as Ford,
Peugeot and Maruti Suzuki for greenfield investments. Although not necessarily a trigger in itself, the fact that automotive demand is increasingly tending towards becoming
pan-India (as opposed to being largely concentrated in urban centers in the past ), is an added enabler to the process of geographical dispersion of automobile clusters. From
an OEM’s standpoint, having a presence in multiple clusters allows it to partially hedge its risks from possible loss in production due to external events such as labour strike,
social agitations or natural calamities that may inflict a particular region. Overall, ICRA expects India’s progress towards becoming a global automotive hub to encourage the
emergence of new automotive clusters, due to eventual capacity constraints in existing ones; however, the ability of state governments to create investor-friendly
environment will be a necessary condition for the above trend to sustain.
Free Trade Agreements – Changing dynamics of auto component sourcing
India has entered into Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), Preferential Trade Agreements (PTAs), Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) and Comprehensive Economic Partnership
Agreements (CEPAs) with several nations to expand the trade of goods and services with its partner nations and encourage investments. Some of the key regions/ countries
with whom India has signed such agreements include ASEAN, Thailand, Singapore, Japan and South Korea, with more such engagements in the offing including the ones
currently being negotiated with the European Union (EU) and China. In fact, India has signed the second highest number of trade treaties with other nations (after Singapore)
in a bid to gain broader market access for its goods and services and to seek fresh investments. The theoretical underpinnings advocating trade agreements between nations
are based on expected benefits in the form of increase in trade volumes, achievement of economies of scale and other improvements over the long run for consumers and
producers alike. Invariably, however, the government’s efforts towards signing of FTAs is accompanied by scepticism shown by institutions and industry groups with regard to
possible loss of domestic industry’s competitiveness, rise in unemployment and dumping of products by exporting countries. While these concerns are not completely
unfounded, there are generally adequate safeguard provisions for vulnerable product categories, besides negative lists to mitigate the potential adverse impact of these
agreements on the domestic industry.
Amongst India’s existing FTAs with various nations, the ones with Thailand, South Korea and Japan are likely to have a greater impact on the component sourcing decisions of
PV OEMs in India, given the more advanced automotive industry in these counties. For OEMs, these FTAs open up opportunities to go for global sourcing of parts and reduce
component costs while avoiding fresh local investments (in case same-design component is already being manufactured overseas); but for component manufacturers, FTAs
create formidable pricing challenge due to lowering or elimination of customs duty which gets further accentuated due to higher operating costs in India in the wake of
infrastructure inefficiencies, higher cost of power, higher effective taxes and inflexible labour laws. India continues to be a net importer of auto components with its trade
deficit for automotive components having expanded to USD 5.0 billion in 2010-11 from USD 210 million in 2004-05. This is attributable to faster growth of imports and to
some extent erosion of the traditional advantage of low cost of production enjoyed by Indian companies against competition from other low cost countries like China,
Malaysia, Thailand and South Africa, which has got accelerated by phased lowering of import duties by India. In fact, imports of auto parts ( such as tyres, batteries, wheels,
chassis components, engine valves etc) from China have ballooned at a brisk rate over the last several years (even without an FTA) with their increasing pervasiveness in the
domestic replacement market as well as greater acceptance by domestic OEMs in the CV and 2W segments. The trade deficit could widen further if the proposal to cut down
the duties currently being levied on import of Completely-Built-Units (CBUs) from EU gets agreed upon as part of ongoing negotiations for the India-EU FTA. Even FTAs
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Price Competitiveness
Product design in developednations; manufacturing in low-cost countries (such as India,China,Thailand, Romania)
Non-Price Competitiveness
Low cost of manufacturing less relevantas innovation offsets higher factor costs
Sourcing from FTA partner nations
Shipping costs
Exchange Rate
Import duty reduction roadmap
Local Sourcing
Infrastructure inefficiencies
Higher power costs
Higher local taxes
between other nations (where India is not a party) could have significant implications for the growth of the Indian industry. For instance, the proposed FTA between Korea and
the European Union (EU) has prompted Hyundai Motor India Limited to suggest that the company may look to shift part of its production meant for export to the EU from
India to Korea – implying lower new capacity creation in India. In ICRA’s view , while FTAs may bring down the cost of select components for PV OEMs, their domestic supplier
base gets exposed to risks related to possible loss of business from OEMs and lower incremental growth opportunities.
In this context, the Indian auto industry must realign its priorities towards building and optimizing capacities, focusing on continuous improvement, absorbing advanced
technologies, adopting latest manufacturing processes and building R&D competencies. Only then, the Indian auto industry coul d shift its comparative advantage from being a
low cost manufacturing location (which is facing challenge from other low cost nations) to becoming a centre of product and process innovation, and in the process achieve
sustainable growth riding on non-price competitiveness.
Existing scenario Implications
PV OEMs already source select components from a
single location (Thailand/ India/ Japan etc) in caseswhere:
(a) The component has high design complexity such
as integrated hub-bearings, toe-correct suspension
bushes, various electronic sensors
(b) Manufacture of the component requires high
tooling investments which may not be viable to
replicate across multiple locations
FTAs may further support this
process and contrary to theintended objective of
encouraging investments in India,
may rather maintain status quo
and discourage technology
transfer
Developed nations are persuading India to accept and
implement global technical standards, UNECE 1958
and 1998 (termed WP-29 which is concerned withharmonization of vehicle standards in safety,
emissions, anti-theft etc)
India's non-adherence to these
standards has acted as a non-
tariff barrier so far. India'seventual compliance may
increase competitive advantage
of European OEMs/ suppliers vis-
à-vis Indian players
Existing Import Duty Structure
Motor Vehicles Auto Parts/ Assemblies
India 110% 7.5-30%
Thailand 80% 30%
ASEAN 30-80% 0-30%
EU (for India & ASEAN) 6.5% 0%
EU (for others) 10-22% 3-4.5%Source: ICRA’s Research, IHS Global Insight
India must endeavour to enhance its non-price competitiveness in automotive sectoras increasing global free trade could dismantle the traditional price competitive plank
Key cost considerations for OEMs in sourcing decisions
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Supply Chain – Force majeure events causing supply-side stress
The current flood situation in Thailand is a second reminder this year of the susceptibility of world supply chains to natural calamities, close on heels of the earthquake and
tsunami that hit Japan in March 2011. As if demand-side stress was not enough, these force majeure events have made matters worse for the Indian PV industry, particularly
for Japanese OEMs like Toyota Kirloskar and Honda Siel who had launched new models recently, some of whose components were being imported from Japan/ Thailand.
Honda Siel had recently returned to full production after the catastrophe in Japan had forced its plant to shut down. Now with floods in Thailand, Honda Siel has stopped
taking bookings for some of its models due to unavailability of parts. Toyota Kirloskar too has started to have production issues owing to the floods. The production at TataMotor’s plant at Thailand which makes pick-up truck Xenon in partnership with a local company has also got disrupted due to floods.
Thailand had become a hub for Japanese PV OEMs in the 1980s and 1990s, partly due to yen appreciation during that period which hampered export competitiveness of
Japanese OEMs influencing them to invest outside of Japan towards building production facilities in consumer markets. Today, as a measure of Thailand's importance to the
global automotive supply chain, the flooding there has forced Toyota globally to reduce output in factories in Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, North America, Pakistan, the
Philippines, South Africa and Vietnam. Honda, the OEM most affected by Thai floods, has also slowed production at factories in several countries. Although foreign companies
affected by floods are not expected to leave Thailand en masse given its well-developed ecosystem of manufacturing industry and relatively lower cost of manufacturing, PV
OEMs may try to balance their future expansion so that they do not have supply chain dependence on a single market. However, such decision making may not be easy with
multiple forces pulling in different directions – on one hand, there is the consideration of reducing supply chain dependence on select markets; on the other, there is the
conflicting objective of pushing up scale economies which inevitably requires investment congregation. This apart, OEMs may also need to re-evaluate the ‘just-in-time’ and
lean manufacturing principles whose associated risks show-up during such acts of nature. In ICRA’s view, in case OEMs that have suffered damage due to flooding in Thailand
do eventually decide to augment their supply chain and develop alternate suppliers in new locations, countries such as India, Indonesia and Vietnam2 could be strongcontenders for these fresh investments by virtue of their large market size and low cost characteristics.
Move towards greater content localization
Over the years, many of the international OEMs in India have had a volatile earnings profile in India due to low
economies of scale, high import content and exposure to foreign currency fluctuations. Now, with most OEMs
targeting the highly competitive small-car segment, thrust on localisation of key components forms an integral
part of international OEMs’ strategy to reduce costs. More particularly in the small car segment, where
competitive pressures are relatively higher compared to other segments. Typically, localization levels are low
during the launch phase and increase gradually depending on the success of the model and volume ramp-up.
While localisation appears to be a straightforward route in achieving cost competitiveness, it i s only meaningfulat large volumes since it involves large investments in capacity building. Besides cost advantage arising from
lower duties and logistics costs, localization also helps in reducing earnings fluctuation on account of currency
volatility. In terms of technological positioning, although the Indian auto component manufacturers may lack
design know-how in certain product categories, their overall capability in manufacturing auto components, with consistent quality and reliability is now well acknowledged by
global OEMs. This is evident from the trend of increased localisation levels in most new models (Refer Table). Additionally, most global auto players are setting up capacities to
locally develop and manufacture engines & transmissions in India with vendor development forming a key part of their strategy, something which was amiss earlier.
2 Both Indonesia and Vietnam had attracted more foreign direct investment than Thailand in 2010 and may attract more investment going forward. Indonesia has a large
population and its domestic demand too is quite strong . The two countries account for more than half of the ~600 million people in the countries tha t comprise the ASEAN
region.
Table 13: Indigenized content in small-car launches
% Localisation
Ford Figo 85
Honda Brio 80
Nissan Micra 85
Toyota Liva 70
Volkswagen Polo 70
Source: Media Articles
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In line with some of the other developing markets, the regulatory environment in India till
2000 required foreign OEMs to partner with local companies to enter the Indian automobile
sector. However, with Government lifting the regulatory restrictions and allowing 100% FDI,
most of the OEMs over the last decade have opted to directly enter the Indian market.
Despite a free market environment, some of the OEMs have still pursued the JV route and
formed alliances with local players. Such JVs were forged with the strategy to leverage on
the product and technological capabilities of the foreign OEMs and the strengths of local
player in terms of their understanding of the domestic market. The performance of JVs in the
OEMs space has been a mixed bag as some of them have parted ways and others have
restructured their business plans. Disagreements on product customization, localization
strategies and issues related to dealership & service network have been some of the key
factors that have impacted the success of these JVs. In contrast, foreign OEMs have
preferred bringing in their global auto component suppliers in the Indian market, through
tie-ups/JVs with local companies. As a result, JVs in the auto components space have
become a prominent trend in the industry as majority of the domestic vendors now have JVswith international suppliers, servicing the foreign OEMs.
Additionally, OEMs have also resorted to technology/platform sharing alliances to fill gaps in
their product portfolios. Some of the OEMs are also sharing manufacturing facilities. Maruti
Suzuki’s technology sourcing for diesel engine from Fiat, Renault-Nissan (production sharing)
and GM-SAIC (plans to introduce platforms from SAIC’s por tfolio) are some of the examples
of recent collaborations in the Indian automotive space. With increasing competitive
pressures and reducing customer ownership cycle, OEMs need to regularly launch new
models and upgrade existing ones to remain competitive. In response to such a scenario,
such alliances are likely to gain momentum as OEMs aim at rationalizing their investments
and maximizing reach through technology, manufacturing and distribution. However, at thesame time, consolidation in the form of entire companies being acquired as has been seen
globally in unlikely in the Indian context.
Trends in JV/Technology Alliances
Table 14: JVs in the Automotive Space in India
JVs Segment Status
M&M-Renault Passenger Cars Called off due to disagreements on product
designing & customization plansTML-Fiat Passenger Cars After a dismal performance, Fiat is planning
to open exclusive dealers
Bajaj-Renault Passenger Cars No development on the small car front so far
Hero-Daimler CVs Called-off in the initial stage itself
Force-MAN CVs MAN aims to go solo in India
Bajaj-Kawasaki Two Wheelers Strategy related issues
TVS-Suzuki Two Wheelers Strategy related issues
Source: ICRA Research
Table 15: JVs in the Auto Component Space in India
JVs Segment
Motherson Group-Kyungshin Wiring Harness
JBM Auto-Magnetto Automotive Sheet Metal Parts
Rico-Continental Braking Systems
Sona Koyo-JTEKT Japan Steering Systems
Gabriel-Magnetti Marelli Dampers
Hero Group-Kiriu Corporation Casings – Brake drums & discs
Source: ICRA Research
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1 8 . 4
2 3 . 5 2
9 . 9
3 0 . 8
3 5 . 1
63.0%
70.4%
74.8%
68.6%
72.5%
56%
58%
60%
62%
64%
66%
68%
70%
72%
74%
76%
-
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12e FY13e
Production (In Lacs) Excess Capacity (in Lacs) Utilisation (%)
Capacity Expansion & Investment Plans
Emerging markets are more distinct than common….
Over the past decade, Brazil, Russia, China and India (commonly referred as BRICS) have emerged as the bellwether of the global automotive demand. Led by China, the BRIC
countries together contributed nearly 30% to the global automotive demand in 2009 compared to just over 20% in 2007. Favourable macro-economic indicators, growing
middle class population, rising disposable income levels and last but not the least extremely low penetration levels have propelled automotive demand in these markets. As a
result of their growing importance in the global automotive landscape and stagnating demand in developed markets, virtually all the multinational OEMs and auto component
suppliers now have presence in emerging markets. Besides strong domestic demand, emerging markets also offer opportunities for OEMs to source auto components, set-up
global R&D back offices and manufacturing footprint in these markets.
In contrast to China, India has clearly emerged as a manufacturing hub for low-cost small cars owing to its scale and significant competencies in the small car space. It also
benefits from lower development cost and an improving auto component manufacturing base. The trend in favour of higher fuel efficiency and smaller cars in developed
Table 16: Recently Greenfield project announcements
OEMs Expansion Plans
Maruti Suzuki New Greenfield manufacturing site in Gujarat
Peugeot Citroen Has identified Gujarat for setting up a manufacturingfacility; Capacity/Investment – 170,000 units/$ 1billion
Ford Planning to put up its second integrated vehicle & engine
manufacturing facility in India
Capacity/Investment - $ 1billion
Source: ICRA Research
Chart: Trend in Capacity Utilization in the PV segment
The strong growth prospects and favourable demand drivers have attracted most of the
international OEMs to emerging markets. Although China remains a favourite destination
given the sheer size and rapid growth that the market has witnessed, India too has
become a centre of attraction for most OEMs. As a result, most of the new entrants have
set up base in India and capacity creation has been at the core of each OEM’s strategy
for the Indian market. Over the past 3-4 years, many of the existing OEMs have
expanded capacities and new entrants have set up Greenfield projects. At the end of
March 2011, India had a capacity to manufacture ~4.0 million vehicles which is expected
to be scaled up to 4.8 million units by 2012-13. While incumbents such as Maruti Suzuki,
Tata Motors (capacity at Sanand) and M&M (at Pune) have added capacities, over 50% of
the capacity expansion has come in from new entrants such as VW (Pune), Renault
Nissan (Tamil Nadu) etc. Recently, Peugeot Citroen and Ford have also finalized their
plans of setting up Greenfield manufacturing sites in Gujarat, which is gradually emerging
as a new automotive hub. Although the manufacturing facilities are largely flexible,
majority of capacity expansion in India has been done keeping in mind opportunities in
the small car segment and exports potential. In the near term, capacity utilization levelsare likely to drop given the slowdown in the industry and impact of recently added
capacities. However, we expect utilization levels to inch upwards to 70%+ levels from
FY13 onwards. The utilization levels may however differ across OEMs as demand for
certain models/platforms could be significantly different from other models in the
market. Such a scenario is common during the launch phase for new models or during
changing trends such as the spike in the demand for diesel cars in India at present.
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markets also augurs well for India. For foreign OEMs, India has also been at the forefront when it comes to outsourcing capabilities particularly in the R&D space owing to its
vast skilled manpower base and expertise in the IT domain. Many of the foreign OEMs have chosen India as a destination for their global R&D centres. The table below
illustrates the key distinctions among BRIC countries from the perspective of the PV industry.
Table 17: Comparison between Emerging markets
Brazil Russia India China
Passenger Car Production* 2.82 million 1.21 million 2.81 million 13.89 million
Vehicle Penetration 158 188 13 56
Industry Structure
In terms of market segmentation,
Brazil is similar to India;
hatchbacks account for over 60%
of volumes
Consumer preference in Russia largely
mirrors that of developed markets,
particularly US; market is dominated by
SUVs and sedans
Unlike other emerging markets, India is
predominantly a small car market
70% of the market is dominated by
hatchbacks
Unlike India, Chinese market is
dominated by sedans, accounting for
over 60% of volumes
Ownership Structure
Is predominantly dominated by
foreign OEMs, which control over
80% of the market; US and
European OEMs have been the
front runners
Post the meltdown, there has been a
significant shift in market share; share of
imported vehicles have dropped
substantially and market is now well
spread out between local OEMs, foreignOEMs and imports
Indian market is dominated by foreign
OEMs; Front runners dominate the market
with top 3 players accounting for over 70%
of the volumes; Suzuki dominates the
market with over 45% share
However, new entrants are nowthreatening the incumbents with aggressive
launches
Due to ownership constraints, foreign
OEMs are present in the Chinese
market through JVs with local
companies
Nearly ~50% of the market is
dominated by foreign JVsMarket share is relatively fragmented
among players
Regulatory Environment
Considered to be one of most
matured markets among other
emerging markets
Deregulation happened somewhere in the
late 90s; offlate there has been increase
in duties on imported cars
With 100% FDI, entry barriers for setting up
operations in India are low
State Govt. also offer additional incentives
China has relatively stringent
regulatory environment; JV route and
local sourcing conditions prevail
Exports Potential
Despite competitive
manufacturing capabilities, most
of automotive production is
dedicated to domestic demand;
Less than 20% of production isexported and majority is to
nearby Latin American countries
Exports potential from Russia is currently
negligible given the limited capabilities in
auto component supplier base and
manufacturing; Most foreign OEMs arerelatively new entrants in Russia
Exports contribute 15% to the overall
industry size
Emerged as a small car manufacturing hub
Competitive manufacturing skills,
favourable government policies, attractive
domestic market and improving vendor
base are together supporting exports
potential
Despite massive domestic market,
which has allowed OEMs to achieve
economies of scales, exports still
account for a small portion of total
production; Robust domestic demand
has kept OEMs busy meeting local
demand
Auto Components Industry
& Localisation
With foreign OEMs being present
for decades, Brazil has relatively
higher level of localization
Localisation levels are relatively low in
Russia; majority of operations are in
SKD/CKD form; components are mostly
imported
Most OEMs have no R&D presence
Auto component industry has gradually
evolved and developed capabilities in various
areas
India is also serving as an R&D outsourcing
destination for OEMs
With competitive costs base and
technology absorption, it has
developed a large auto part exports
base Most OEMs have established
strong localization capabilities
Source: ICRA Research; Industry Data * Source: International organization of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers (2010)
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1 6 . 0
1 4
. 1
1 3 . 4
3 . 6
3 . 5
3 . 0
-11.4%
-5.5%-2.4%
-2.1%
1.7%
-14%
-12%
-10%
-8%
-6%
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
4%
-
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
10.0
12.0
14.0
16.0
18.0
CY08 CY09 CY10 Q1 CY11 Q2 CY11 Q3 CY11
V o l u m e s ( i n M
n U n i t s )
Europe Passenger Vehicle Sales Change (%) -YoY (RHS)
7 . 8
7 . 6
6 . 8
5 . 4 5
. 6
5 . 1
-2.6%
-10.5%
-20.2%
4.3%
7.7%
-25%
-20%
-15%
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
-
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.07.0
8.0
9.0
CY06 CY07 CY08 CY09 CY10 YTD CY11
V o l u m e s ( i n M n U n i t s )
US Passenger Car Sales Change (%) -YoY (RHS)
8 . 8
1 3 . 0
1 7 . 2
9 . 2
47.8%32.8%
6.0%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
-
5.0
10.0
15.0
20.0
CY08 CY09 CY10 YTD CY11
V o l u m e s ( i n M n U n i t s )
China L ight Vehicles Sales Change (%) -YoY (RHS)
Global Passenger Vehicle Sales Trend
Trend in Passenger Vehicle Sales in Europe
Source: ACEA, ICRA Estimates
Chart: Trend in Passenger Vehicle Sales in US
Source: Wards Auto, ICRA Estimates
Chart: Trend in Passenger Vehicle Sales in China
Mixed trends are emerging across markets; while U.S. and emerging markets are
growing; macro-economic headwinds in Europe are weighing on demand
European markets continue to witness stagnating demand: The demand for passenger vehicles in
European regions continues stagnate amid steadily weakening macro-economic outlook and impact of
scrappage schemes which fueled demand post the downturn. With the exception of Germany which has
posted a growth of 10% till YTD, most of the major European markets (UK, France, Italy and Spain)
continue to witness a declining trend in sales. Unlike US, where OEMs considerably rationalized excess
capacity after the financial crisis, European OEMs, particularly in Western Europe face problem of
overcapacity. Given the uncertain macro-economic scenario, consumers are likely to postpone their
purchases for some time to come, resulting in a weak demand in the near term.
Recovery underway in the US on back of low base: In contrast to the European markets the demand for
passenger vehicles in the US has been steadily recovering after contracting sharply post the meltdown.
Much of the growth is attributable to the low-base effect. During the current year, the demand for
passenger vehicles has grown by 7.7% between January-October 2011. While persistently highunemployment rate and reduced economic growth forecasts weigh on the outlook, the market is likely to
still remain in the growth in the near term.
Emerging markets are also losing steam: The demand for passenger vehicles has also considerably
slowed down in emerging markets. China, the largest market (by volumes) and the key contributor the
global auto demand is also witnessing moderation in growth in the current year In Russia too, after the
meltdown when market shrunk by almost 50%, the recovery has been gradual. Increasing inflationary
pressures and rising interest rates (as a result of monetary tightening) besides high-base have been the
root cause for slowing sales.
Table: Impact on Global Auto OEMsKey Issues
US OEMs Significant capacity elimination, funding support by the Govt. and improvement in demand has
considerably improved the earning generating ability of US based OEMs; however shifting
trends towards smaller vehicles require OEMs to consistently invest in new platforms and
driveline technologies
European OEMs OEMs with higher dependence on European markets are more vulnerable to stagnating
demand environment in Europe; Rising commodity prices and overcapacity problem,
especially in Western Europe continue to impact earnings profile of OEMs
Japanese OEMs Japanese OEMs are recovering from the earthquake and subsequent production disruption
and bottlenecks in supply chain; further strengthening of Yen against the US$ has been hurting
exports earnings of OEMs exporting to the US
Source: ICRA Research
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MARUTI SUZUKI INDIA LIMITED – Performance Overview in Q2 FY12
MARUTI SUZUKI INDIA LIMITED – Operating Performance Overview
Q2 FY11 Q2 FY12Change
(%)Q1 FY12
Mini 139,765 112,848 -19.3% 122,052
Compact 64,395 44,864 -30.3% 55,651
Super Compact 25,489 20,288 -20.4% 25,095
Mid Size 5,873 4,392 -25.2% 5,517
Executive 0 54 117
Utility Vehicles 818 2,344 186.6% 1,502MPVs 41596 37,616 -9.6% 40,749
Exports 35,718 29,901 -16.3% 30,843
ICRA Ratings
Shareholding Pattern (%)
Suzuki Motor, Japan 54.2%
FIIs 19.2%
DIIs 17.7%
Others 8.9%
Price Performance (%)
3M 12M
MSIL -18.7% -33.7%
BSE Auto -10.9% -22.1%
BSE Sensex -11.1% -24.4%
Stock Movement
Bloomberg Code MSIL
Market Capitalisation Rs.26,468 Cr
Valuations
FY12e FY13e
Price/Earnings 13.8 10.7
Price/Sales 0.7 0.6
Source: Bloomberg Consensus Estimates
-
50
100
150
200
250
300
-
500.0
1,000.0
1,500.0
2,000.0
3 1 - D e c - 0 9
2 8 - F e b - 1 0
3 0 - A p r - 1 0
3 0 - J u n - 1 0
3 1 - A u g - 1 0
3 1 - O c t - 1 0
3 1 - D e c - 1 0
2 8 - F e b - 1 1
3 0 - A p r - 1 1
3 0 - J u n - 1 1
3 1 - A u g - 1 1
3 1 - O c t - 1 1
Volumes (in Lacs) Stock Price
Long Term Not Rated
Short Term Not Rated
Outlook Not Rated
Labour troubles and unfavourable currency mar EBITDA and PAT in Q2 FY12
Revenue Growth – In Q2 FY12, the revenues of Maruti Suzuki India
Limited (MSIL) at 7,831.6 Crore reported a sharp decline of 14.4% YoY,
impacted by production disruption at its Manesar plant during the
September month, besides sluggish demand conditions that impactedthe PV industry as a whole. The demand-supply double whammy
translated into a volume decline of 19.6% YoY and 10.4% QoQ for MSIL
in Q2 FY12. The decline is expected to be even more precipitous in Q3
FY12 in the wake of the labour strike which continued into October and
disrupted production not only at the Manesar plant but also the
Gurgaon plant of MSIL. However, we expect MSIL’s reve nue growth to
remain healthy over the medium term, even as some market share loss
seems inevitable, by virtue of its strong product portfolio, expansive
distribution network and economies of scale, apart from favourable
fundamental demand drivers for the PV industry.
Profitability – In Q2 FY12, MSIL reported OPBDIT of Rs. 494.2 Crore on astandalone basis, a decline of 48.5% YoY and decline of 39.3% QoQ. The
decline was on account of lower revenues and unfavourable JPY
movement resulting in MTM losses on royalty and commodity hedges.
We expect MSIL’s OPBDIT growth to remain negative in Q3 FY12
consequent to the deleterious impact of the labour strike that got
resolved only by end-October 2011, relatively slower production ramp-
up post the period of strike, elevated discount levels and price
compensation scheduled to be offered to the vendors in Q3 FY12
(related to imported components) due to JPY appreciation in Q2 FY12
(MSIL’s indirect imports through vendors account for 14% of its net
sales). Although MSIL�